Two Lovers
A Brooklyn-set romantic drama about a bachelor torn between the family friend his parents wish he would marry and his beautiful but volatile new neighbor. Leonard Kraditor is a burned-out case, living…
Two Lovers
A Brooklyn-set romantic drama about a bachelor torn between the family friend his parents wish he would marry and his beautiful but volatile new neighbor. Leonard Kraditor is a burned-out case, living with his immigrant parents after his fiancée left him, helping out at their Brooklyn dry cleaners, taking photographs, at loose ends, suicidal. In quick succession, he meets two women: Sandra, the daughter of his parents' business associates, frank, direct, sensual, Jewish like Leonard; and, his neighbor Michelle, mercurial, rootless, fun, blond, unattainable. Michelle is in love with a married man and cries on Leonard's shoulder; Sandra wants to save him. Is Leonard willing to risk losing Sandra's fidelity for the moments Michelle's moods swing toward him? Can this end well? —<jhailey@hotmail.com> After attempting to commit suicide jumping in the water, Leonard Kraditor gives up and returns to his parent's apartment in Brooklyn. Leonard had a great disappointment with his fiancée and after a psychological treatment, he is not stable. During the night, he meets Sandra Cohen in a dinner party promoted by his family to the family of Michael Cohen, who wants a partnership with his father in his dry cleaning business. Later Leonard meets his new neighbor Michelle Rausch and he immediately feels attracted to her. Leonard and Sandra have a love affair with each other, and Sandra feels in love with him. But Leonard is in love with Michelle who is in love with her married lover Ronald Blatt who does not want to leave his wife or son. How will this quartet of unrequited loves end? —Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Two Lovers
Drama,Romance
Film Details
A Brooklyn-set romantic drama about a bachelor torn between the family friend his parents wish he would marry and his beautiful but volatile new neighbor. Leonard Kraditor is a burned-out case, living with his immigrant parents after his fiancée left him, helping out at their Brooklyn dry cleaners, taking photographs, at loose ends, suicidal. In quick succession, he meets two women: Sandra, the daughter of his parents' business associates, frank, direct, sensual, Jewish like Leonard; and, his neighbor Michelle, mercurial, rootless, fun, blond, unattainable.
Michelle is in love with a married man and cries on Leonard's shoulder; Sandra wants to save him. Is Leonard willing to risk losing Sandra's fidelity for the moments Michelle's moods swing toward him? Can this end well? —<jhailey@hotmail.com> After attempting to commit suicide jumping in the water, Leonard Kraditor gives up and returns to his parent's apartment in Brooklyn. Leonard had a great disappointment with his fiancée and after a psychological treatment, he is not stable.
During the night, he meets Sandra Cohen in a dinner party promoted by his family to the family of Michael Cohen, who wants a partnership with his father in his dry cleaning business. Later Leonard meets his new neighbor Michelle Rausch and he immediately feels attracted to her. Leonard and Sandra have a love affair with each other, and Sandra feels in love with him.
But Leonard is in love with Michelle who is in love with her married lover Ronald Blatt who does not want to leave his wife or son. How will this quartet of unrequited loves end? —Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.